quantitation in a sentence
Examples
- This historic test consisted, in its first step, of taking an oral dose of radiolabelled vitamin B 12, followed by quantitation of the vitamin in the patient's urine over a 24-hour period via measurement of the radioactivity.
- The SN test is occasionally used for detection and quantitation of humoral antibody for PPV . Neutralization of infectivity is usually confirmed by the absence or reduction either of intranuclear inclusions or fluorescent cells in cultures or of viral hemagglutinin in the culture medium.
- With the combined capabilities of " top-down " and " bottom-up " approaches, proteomics can pursue inquiries ranging from quantitation of gene expression between growth conditions ( whether nutritional, spatial, temporal, or chemical ) to protein structural information.
- AMS service is now more accessible for biochemical quantitation from several private companies and non-commercial access to AMS is available at the National Institutes of Health ( NIH ) Research Resource at Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory, or through the development of smaller affordable spectrometers.
- The qualitative " reading " usually based on detection of intensity of transmitted light by spectrophotometry, which involves quantitation of transmission of some specific wavelength of light through the liquid ( as well as the transparent bottom of the well in the multiple-well plate format ).
- To evaluate peripheral lymphocyte function, T and B cell quantitation and in vitro responses to three nonspecific mitogens were studied in 34 persons with highest PBB levels ( mean : 787 ppb ), and in 56 with low levels ( mean : 2.8 ppb ).
- Quantitation is made in reference to a methylated reference DNA . A modification to this protocol to increase the specificity of the PCR for successfully bisulfite-converted DNA ( ConLight-MSP ) uses an additional probe to bisulfite-unconverted DNA to quantify this non-specific amplification.
- The " isolation " of a natural product refers, depending on context, either to the isolation of sufficient quantities of pure chemical matter for chemical structure elucidation, derivitzation / degradation chemistry, biological testing, and other research needs ( generally milligrams to grams, but historically, often more ), or to the isolation of " analytical quantities " of the substance of interest, where the focus is on identification and quantitation of the substance ( e . g . in biological tissue or fluid ), and where the quantity isolated depends on the analytical method applied ( but is generally always sub-microgram in scale ).